TUARY 8, 1955 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE- FI UARY8, 1~5 ~lE ICHGAN AIL PAG __ ----7 TI-1- )BE COMPLAINTS: ity Accelerates Action )n. Building Inspections Ann Arbor's building inspec- tion program is getting into full swing now that the additional in- spector appointed last fall is on the job. Robert E. Miller, who resigned as a fireman to help John E. Ryan } check the city's multiple unit dwellings for safety standard vi- olations, assumed his new duties at the beginning of the year. Since then, the Department of Building Inspection and Safety Engineering has been inspecting "three or four houses a day," ac- cording to Ryan and Miller. Two Months Stretch They estimate it will take them two months to finish investigat- ing complaints that have piled up and begin a systematic inspec- tion of the city's approximately 1,800 multiple unit dwellings. A complaint comes usually from a roomer who doesn't feel 'safe' because of overcrowded conditions or inadequate means of exit ,in case of fire. An investigation of the com- plaint is made as soon as possible. Miller or Ryan takes along a form sheet filled out with information as he goes from the basement to the top floor. Time Limit Set With the results of the inspec- tion listed in detail, a carbon copy of the completed form is sent to the owner of the building along with a letter pointing out any vi- olations and giving him a certain time in which to bring his prop- erty up to safety standards. An owner is usually given 60 days to correct a violation, Ryan said. "But it may be less than that if the violation is serious." He re- ported only one case where as few as 14 days were allowed. At the end of the alloted time, another inspection is made. In most cases, the owner is concerned about the safety on his property, because unsafe conditions cost him money, if only on insurance premiums. Because of this, the second inspection usually finds satisfactory conditions. In fact, Miller estimated that about 50 per cent of the inspec- tions made have been requested by owners. $10 -$100 Penalties The law provides for those who are unconcerned to the point of not cooperating with the Depart- ment's requests. For a safety vio- lation, an owner is subject to a penalty of not less than $10 nor more than $100. For refusing to comply with an order to correct unsatisfactory conditions, he may be fined not less than $50 nor more than $250, and not less than ten days in jail. Each day a condition goes uncor- rected is a separate violation. Once in a while, Ryan and Mil- ler come across real hardship cases. "But each situation is treated as a separate case," Ryan said. Extenuating circumstances are taken into account. The Department is not unrea- sonable, he added. It simply wants to make Ann Arbor housing safe, because in both the short-run and the long-run, it is for the good of both owner and tenants. "Our biggest job," Ryan said, as Miller nodded in agreement, "is selling that idea." J-IHop Booths Signed contracts for J-Hop booths, questionnaires a n d signed rules are due Saturday. Any house not able to get theirs in may contact Gene Cohen, Normandy 2-9705. Poll Favors U1'As It Is (Continued from Page 1) certainly pass them again way." any- An dan engineer expressed theI common dating problem of his group saying, "The engineers are left out of it. There should be a mass mixer betweenengineers and nurses." But the common feeling was, well as James Filgis, '56, put it: "I like it fairly well the way it is." Most University students agree. Nobody even mentioned beef birds. Industry Program Distributes First Nuclear Energy Survey As its first action since it was launched this fall, the University's new Industry Program is currently distributing a survey of the nucle- ar energy field to interested mem- bers of industry. Titled, "A Peacetime Survey of Nuclear Energy from .an Indus- trial Viewpoint," the manual is the result of a year's work by a team of chemical engineers. The well-illustrated survey shows var- ious industries how they can find a role in the nuclear field. Difficulties Discussed Difficulties which might be en- countered, such as the handling and storage of radioactive by- products, are also discussed in the text. Other topics dealt with in the manual include the uses of radioactive fission products from reactors, the preparation of fuel from ores and the corporations currently engaged in the atomic energy field. The first of its kind, the survey is dedicated to the late George W. Mason, a University alumnus, who Engineering Council Provides Government, Gives Service By GAIL GOLDSTEIN I i , . JD Y,%XtAAJLJ %XJJUJLJF&-JJLJLUA.L'q I Providing liaison between engi- neering students and the faculty is the job of the Engineering Coun- cil. Discussing the problem at hand and coming to a conclusion are the main steps the council takes before submitting its decisions to the Dean's office for consideration. Curriculum, engineering school policy, and sponsorship of many service projects come under the council's consideration. David Davies, '55E, current president, said that replacing the Engineering Council which went out of existence in 1952, the pres- ent council is largely the work of Tawfig Khoury,' '55E, who was president of the Engineering Steering Council in 1953-54. Khou- ry realized that the Steering Coun- cil was doing little in the way of student programs and instigated work on the formation of a new council. After the constitution and final plans were drawn, they were presented to the Dean's office and the SAC for approval. In the spring of 1954. thn coun- cil went into operation with Da- vid Davies, '55E, who drafted the council's constitution as president; Bill Diamend, '56E, vice-president; and Charles Stickles, '55E, secre- tary-treasurer. Each department in the Engi- neering School has at least one professional organization. T h e presidents of each organization takes a position on the council along with the president of the senior class and members at large who are chosen by petition. The council is at present work- ing on a plan whereby a system of class boards will be developed in the school which will send repre- sentatives to the council. These I representatives will serve as a li- aison between the classes and the governing group. An assembly for seniors, called Senior Seminar, said Davis, was th first project worked on by the council. This assembly presents students with job prospects and a review of the types of engineering careers open today. For the benefit of high school students who visit the University in the spring, the council is spon- soring the Engineering Open House. Members are also working on a proposal of having a mass meeting to try to find out about desired curriculum changes. A committee will be formed at this meeting to make specific recom- mendations to the Dean's office for consideration. Latest project is the attempt by the council to have an engineering lounge in E. Engine Building where meetings of the various or- ganizations in the school could take place. An office is also needed for the organizations to do their paper work in. Meetings of this group are open to all students. Red Cross Opens Teachers' Course Those interested in becoming swimming teachers at camps this summer may enroll before Jan. 17 for the Red Cross water safety in- structors' course. It will begin at the end of the month, according to Mrs. Ethel L. Atkinson, executive secretary of the local chapter. Interested persons may enroll by coming to or calling Red Cross headquarters in the Nickels Ar- cade. took a prominent part in the es- tablishment of the Phoenix Pro- ject andwas the first subscriber to the Industry Program. Communication Chief Aim The program has, as its chief objective, direct communication between the University's College of Engineering and industry. The College will disseminate non-classified information and ar- range technical meetings for in- dustries at the same time increas- ing its own educational program through increased contact withl representatives of industry. Big Ten Group To Discuss Dorm Living Representatives of independent men and women will hash over mutual problems at the Big Ten Residence Halls Conference April 29 to May 1 at the University. Held each year at one of the Western Conference schools, the meeting's major purpose is to dis- cuss common problems of resi- dence hall living and student gov- ernment, according to Silvia Le- vi, '56, co-chairman of the Assem- bly Association-Interhouse Coun- cil conference committee. The University has agreed to supply living quarters and linens free of charge for the estimated 150 students expected to attend the conference from other schools, Miss Levi said. Other expenses will be covered by a registration fee which has been approximately $7.50 in past years. Plans for the conference include inviting some Michigan colleges which are not members of the Big Ten to attend as guest schools. Final decision as to which schools will be asked has not been made, Miss Levi said. DAC To Hold Panel Tonight A panel discussion will follow! tonight's performance of "She Stoops to Conquer," at the Dra- matic Arts Center. Participating in the talks will be Prof. Frank L. Huntley of the Eng- lish departmept, Prof. Wilfred Kaplan of the mathematics de- partment, Anne Heidbreder and Joe Gistirak, director of the pro- duction. The three final performances of the Goldsmith play will be at 8:15 p.m. today and 2:30 p.m. and 8:15 p.m. tomorrow. Admission is $1.65. KilledVirus' Means Safe Immunity (Continued from Page 1) thought which believes lasting im- munity can only be accomplished by using live vaccine. Dr. Enders said recently in Stockholm he be- lieves the final vaccine will use live virus. Safety of Virus "We have to be careful," Dr. Landauer said, "not to use a vac- cine which will itself cause an infection of a serious nature. The Salk vaccine, using dead virus, is perfectly safe." The doctor pointed out there are large supplies of killfed virus avail- able. If later tests show a live vir- us would be more effective it will be used. Preliminary tests showed Salk vaccine was safe. With the know- ledge that Salk vaccine raised the level of virus-fighting antibodies nigher than gamma globulin and could be manufactured in quantity at a cost low enough to make feas- ible widespread use, preparations were begun for a massive under- taking-field trials to establish the Salk vaccine's value. NYU To Give Twenty Law Scholarships Annual competition for the Eli- hu Root-Samuel J. Tilden Schol- arships, designed to select "20 most promising college seniors planning legal careers," has been announ- ced by New York University. Valued at $6,600 each, scholar- ships are awarded to two candi- dates from each of the ten Fed- eral Judicial Circuits for a spe- cial training program at New York University. Awards will be made on the ba- sis of academic records, extra-cur- ricular activities and potential ca- pacity for public leadership. Candidates must be unmarried male citizens of the United States who will have received baccalau- reate degrees from an approved college by the time they begin studying law. Information may be obtained from the dean of the New York University School of Law, Wash- ington Square, New York 3, N.Y. Child Films Now Available Half-hour filmed shows on child development are now being made available to groups around the state by the University. The shows are up-to-date ver- sions of a series presented over WWJ-TV, Detroit, several years ago by Dean Willard C. Olson of the education school, an authori- ty on child development. Organizations interested in tak- ing advantage of this service may contact the University's Audio- Visual Education Center in the Administration Building for fur- ther details. Clubs Sponsor Girls Home Girlstown, a proposed home for gils is to be established in the Ann Arbor region by the Michigan State Federation of Women's Clubs. Girlstown is to be a home for girls without police records and who need refuge from unfavorable home conditions. Girls will be re- commended to Girlstown by so- cial agencies. Since the site for Girlstown has not been chosen, the University Board of Regents has promised cooperation in helping to find a building, choose trained staff members and to participate in the operation of Girlstown after its establishment. NUCLEAR RESEARCH: -X E-rr -Courtesy of Brookhaven National Laboratory GUARDS CHECKING CARS LEAVING THE LABORATORY By HARRY STRAUSS In the center of New York's Long Island is some valuable property. During World War II, it was Camp Upton, an Army induction center. After the war, the government developed the 3500 acres into a center of nuclear research and de- velopment: Brookhaven National Laboratory. It is sponsored by nine northeastern schools, Associated Universities, Inc., under contract with the Atomic Energy Commis- sion. Population: 1400 During most of the year, Brook- haven employs about 1400 workers, but only a minority live on the post itself. Well-designed apart- ments overshadow the houses' ex- teriors for they are reconverted barracks. The site is not open to the gen- eral public. All employees go through careful security checking, and visitors are permitted only via passes signed by an employee. Cars are stopped at the two en- trances for identification, Isolation Without a car, an individual is lost: There are no stores, only a cafe- teria and snack bar; goods must be bought in neighboring towns. The area lies in a valley, two miles from one highway and four from the other. Patchogue, the largest city in the vicinity, is about 14 miles away. Tennis and handball courts, a gymnasium, a swimming pool (open only in the summer) and a baseball diamond are the recrea- tional facilities. A large theater and smaller halls are used for lectures as well as dramas pre- sented by the post's theater group. Summer Program Summer students form, an im- portant part of Brookhaven's re- search program, coming there only after high recommendation from their schools. A typical student was Roger Theis, a junior in Bates College, Me., back for his second summer working in biophysics. The year before he worked with plant hor- mones, switching after deciding what field he expects to enter. Summarizing the summer pro- gram, Theis said that Brookhaven offers "tremendous opportunity for research, especially for under- graduate experience-to see and use machines and apparatus that have previously been described in textbooks. , "There is the opportunity in learning by doing and being ex- posed to understanding scientists in their fields." -Courtesy of BNL RECONVERTED BARRACK HOUSING ON THE POST -Daily-Harry Strauss INSIDE THE FAMOUS GREENHOUSE -Daily-Harry Strauss SOME OF THE HUNDREDS OF IRRADIATED PLANTS ,L' .. w.. ,.,.. ..... P ,...., t r ,.. -, r ., ( LOOK HERE! 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